“…Tree‐ring chronologies are generally used to indicate high‐to‐low‐frequency fluctuations in climate and hydrology over hundreds to thousands of years, and hydrology knowledge in tree rings can be analysed in its own right to provide a glimpse into what the streamflow has been in the past and what we can expect it to be in the future (Fritts, 1976; Yuan et al., 2007; Cook et al, 2013; Meko et al, 2012; Woodhouse & Pederson, 2018; Liu et al, 2020; Rao et al, 2020). Several streamflow reconstructions from Central Asia have been undertaken in recent decades, making it possible to describe the water resource history of Central Asia (Chen et al, 2022; Chen, He, et al, 2017; Panyushkina et al, 2018; Zhang, Ermenbaev, et al, 2020; Zhang, He, et al, 2020; Zhao et al, 2022). But compared to the Syr Darya River basin, for example, the number of sampling sites from the Amu Darya River basin is relatively small.…”